Maliqi v. 17 East 89th Street Tenants, Inc.

25 Misc. 3d 182
CourtNew York Supreme Court
DecidedJune 12, 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 25 Misc. 3d 182 (Maliqi v. 17 East 89th Street Tenants, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Maliqi v. 17 East 89th Street Tenants, Inc., 25 Misc. 3d 182 (N.Y. Super. Ct. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Dominic R. Massaro, J.

In this workplace injury case involving an undocumented political asylum seeker, the parties request pretrial rulings concerning admissibility of certain evidence proffered for trial.

Defendant’s in limine motion seeks to exclude evidence concerning plaintiffs projected future lost wages and/or medical expenses based upon the possibility that the Board of Immigration Appeals (hereinafter BIA)1 will deny plaintiff political asylum in the United States (see generally Maliqi v Attorney Gen. of U.S., 262 Fed Appx 426 [3d Cir 2008]).

Plaintiff opposes defendant’s motion and seeks a contrary ruling prohibiting defendant from arguing that plaintiffs immigra[184]*184tion status bars future lost wages and/or medical expenses. Plaintiff also seeks an in limine ruling precluding defendant from claiming that plaintiff is illegally in the United States. In these regards, plaintiff seeks to introduce testimony from an expert in economics concerning plaintiff’s future earnings potential and medical costs and plaintiffs immigration counsel as an expert in immigration law.

The court must consider these applications against a backdrop of political intrigue in Kosovo,2 the national controversy involving undocumented workers generally, and our Court of Appeals holding in Balbuena v IDR Realty LLC (6 NY3d 338 [2006]). The instant matter presents — apparently for the first time in this state — an alleged workplace injury case involving an undocumented claimant who invokes political asylum protection.

Political Asylum According to testimony during his immigration proceedings (see Maliqi v Attorney Gen. of U.S., supra), plaintiff is an ethnic Albanian who left Kosovo in 2003 and entered the United States via Canada in November of that year without valid documentation. He is presently involved in political asylum proceedings before the BIA that may result in his deportation.

Throughout the decade of the 1990s, Serbian officials arrested plaintiff and detained, threatened and beat him. Later, as part of nationalist incursion by the central Serbian government in March of 1999, Maliqi was forced from Kosovo with other ethnic Albanians.3 Maliqi relocated to Albania where he remained until United Nations/NATO forces cleared the way for his return three months later.

Plaintiff told Department of Homeland Security agents that upon returning to Kosovo he resumed his political activities with the Democratic League of Kosovo (DLK). Because of this DLK affiliation, Maliqi claimed that twice he was again targeted for persecution. First, while he was monitoring the 2001 elections, “unknown persons” threatened him to quit political activities. Second, he claimed that two years later several Albanian-speaking men entered his taxicab and held a gun to

[185]*185his head. The men beat Maliqi for several hours, told him to terminate his political activities, and left him unconscious in the street. Maliqi once more left Kosovo because of the last incident, but his wife and four children remain there. For these reasons, plaintiff felt justified in seeking political asylum after entering this country illegally (see 8 USC § 1158).4

Immigration Litigation

After plaintiff applied for political asylum, his application for relief was heard by an immigration judge who denied Maliqi’s prayer. The denial was reviewed by the BIA and affirmed. On appeal, the Third Circuit Court of Appeals found that the decisions of both the immigration judge and the BIA were “sufficiently vague, incomplete, and contradictory” so that the appeals court lacked a sufficient basis to properly review Maliqi’s claims (see Maliqi v Attorney Gen. of U.S. at 429). Accordingly, the Third Circuit remanded the case to the BIA for subsequent agency action consistent with the court’s opinion. The appeals court faulted the prior tribunals’ opinions as inadequate regarding denial of political asylum, withholding of removal, and relief sought under the United Nations Convention Against Torture.5 In regard to the reconsideration, the parties advised this court that the BIA is scheduled to revisit the case in July 2009. Plaintiff did not agree to defendant’s suggestion that this case be continued pending BIA reconsideration.

Employment

After filing for political asylum, plaintiff found employment in the construction industry, working for Fine-Line Building Services, Inc., which hired plaintiff to renovate and to paint the lobby area of the premises located at 17 East 89th Street, New York County. While working for Fine-Line Building Services, plaintiff was injured on June 13, 2006. A large mail cart, being handled by defendant’s employee, fell over upon plaintiff as he painted the baseboard in the hallway of defendant’s building. The instant case followed.

Earlier in the present litigation, the court (Billings, J.) ruled that defendant’s defense, seeking to bar plaintiff from recover[186]*186ing future lost wages and medical expenses, remained viable, but permitted plaintiff to proceed on lost wages and medical expenses calculated using economic levels in the United States for any period of time that he resided here (see Balbuena v IDR Realty LLC, supra).

Concerning future lost earnings and/or medical expenses, because plaintiff entered this country illegally and plaintiffs application for political asylum was initially denied, defendant says evidence about plaintiffs immigration status is relevant to any recovery. The evidence impacts Maliqi’s future lost wages and medical expenses, especially because defendant argues that an American employer cannot knowingly hire an undocumented person without obtaining proof of proper work authorization (that is, the so-called “green card”).

In response to defendant’s argument that he could not legally be employed, plaintiff maintains that regardless of the legality of employment, any immigration reference would prejudice the jury because of the present national controversy about undocumented aliens employed here.6 Further, plaintiff says allegations of immediate deportation are untrue. He states that his evidence (including expert testimony) will show that he is legally present in this country. The federal government has instituted no administrative or criminal proceedings against Maliqi, and plaintiff maintains he voluntarily revealed his presence to the Department of Homeland Security with his asylum application. According to plaintiff, he is entitled to asylum under both international and domestic law (see generally Immigration and Nationality Act of 1952 § 252 [codified at 8 USC § 1282]; Convention Against Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman, or Degrading Treatment or Punishment, supra n 5). Because his appeal remains pending, plaintiff says he retains the right to remain in the United States during reconsideration of his BIA case and no negative inference arises from that fact (see generally Yeung v Immigration & Naturalization Serv., 76 F3d 337 [11th Cir 1995]).

Defendant’s Response

Defendant says it cannot be precluded from introducing evidence at trial concerning plaintiffs immigration status because [187]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
25 Misc. 3d 182, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maliqi-v-17-east-89th-street-tenants-inc-nysupct-2009.